Tuesday, May 26, 2020
‘My Wife Deserves Better’: Widower Of Scarborough Aide Asks Twitter To Delete Trump Conspiracies
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jackbrewster/2020/05/26/my-wife-deserves-better-widower-of-scarborough-aide-asks-twitter-to-delete-trump-conspiracies/#34cbe8631006
The widower of Lori Klausutis, an aide to Joe Scarborough when he was a
member of Congress who died in 2001, called on Twitter to take down
President Trump’s tweets baselessly accusing the MSNBC host of murdering
her.
Former student attempts to run over principal of Baltimore yeshiva
https://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/Flash.aspx/501647
A former student at Baltimore
yeshiva Ner Yisrael rammed his car into the vehicle of a staff member
and then attempted to run over the yeshiva principal walking nearby,
barely missing him.
Disapproval of Donald Trump Climbs Higher As Coronavirus Death Toll Nears 100,000 in U.S.
https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-disapproval-climbs-coronavirus-deaths-near-100000-1506426
President
Donald Trump's disapproval rating has continued to climb this month as
coronavirus deaths have neared 100,000 in the U.S., according to new
data.
The FiveThirtyEight approval rating tracker found that Trump's average disapproval rating stood at 53.5 percent on Monday—putting it at its highest level since mid-January.
By comparison, the president's average approval rating slumped to 42.7 percent—a little more than three points down on his post-acquittal peak last month.
The FiveThirtyEight approval rating tracker found that Trump's average disapproval rating stood at 53.5 percent on Monday—putting it at its highest level since mid-January.
By comparison, the president's average approval rating slumped to 42.7 percent—a little more than three points down on his post-acquittal peak last month.
Israeli court opens way for Australian sex crime suspect's extradition
https://www.ynetnews.com/article/BkEttd5sU
Court rules Malka Leifer, alleged sexual abuser from Melbourne, has been simulating mental illness and is fit to be tried; ruling was made after Leifer's lawyers contested experts who deemed her fit for trial back in January
Member of Lev Tahor sect indicted for child abuse
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/280890
Former principal of Lev Tahor school in Canada indicted for alleged physical and mental torture of children.
Court rules alleged child sex abuser Leifer fit to be extradited for trial
https://www.timesofisrael.com/court-rules-alleged-pedophile-malka-leifer-fit-to-be-extradited-for-trial/
Judge says former school principal feigned mental illness to avoid facing 74 counts of child sex abuse in Australia; defense plans appeal after July 20 extradition hearing
In a major ruling, the Jerusalem District Court has determined that
alleged serial pedophile Malka Leifer is mentally fit for extradition to
Australia to stand trial on charges of 74 counts of child sex abuse.
The decision handed down by Judge Chana Miriam Lomp to reject
Leifer’s claims that she was unfit to stand trial seemingly caps a
years-long struggle by Leifer’s alleged victims and Australian
authorities to see her returned to face justice.
“This abusive woman has been
exploiting Israeli courts for 6 years! Intentionally creating obstacles,
endless vexatious arguments – only lengthening our ongoing trauma!”
said one of Leifer’s alleged victims, Dassi Erlich, in a statement
immediately after the ruling. “Too many emotions to process!!! This is
huge!”
The world sacrificed its elderly in the race to protect hospitals. The result was a catastrophe in care homes
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/05/26/world/elderly-care-homes-coronavirus-intl/index.html
By February 25,
the World Health Organization said the virus had already killed
thousands in China and was spreading through northern Italy, but at the
time there were just 13 confirmed cases and no deaths in the UK. While
the government ordered hospitals to prepare for an influx of patients,
its advice to some of the country's most vulnerable people -- elderly
residents of care or nursing homes -- was that they were "very unlikely" to be infected.
That
guidance would remain in place over the next two-and-a-half weeks, as
the number of coronavirus cases in the UK exploded. By the time the
advice was withdrawn on March 13 and replaced with new guidance, there were 594 confirmed cases, and it was too late.
Data published on LTCcovid shows that more than half of all coronavirus deaths
in nations including Belgium, France, Ireland, Canada and Norway
occurred in care homes or among care home residents in all settings. In
the US, data collated by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF)
from 35 states and included in the LSE report showed that care home
residents accounted for 30,130, or at least 34.6%, of the more than
87,000 coronavirus deaths recorded as of May 15. Care home residents
are also overrepresented in some countries with relatively few deaths,
accounting for 26 out of the first 99 deaths documented in Australia,
or more than a quarter of all fatalities through May 18.
Sweden
has repeatedly defended its controversial decision to remain relatively
permissive in its restrictions on movement, but Health Minister Lena
Hallengren admitted a "big failure" to protect the elderly and said care
homes were now of the utmost importance, according to Swedish media.
There had been 1,661 coronavirus deaths among care home residents out
of 3,395 total coronavirus deaths in Sweden by May 14, or 49%, according
to LTCcovid's report.
Hong Kong says it has not had a single
infection in a care home, and only four deaths and just over 1,000 cases
in total. In Singapore, just two of 18 deaths have taken place among
care home residents.
"There's been
a lot of focus in hospitals and focus on community transmission, but
not in care homes. And I think that reflects the low status that the
care sector has in many countries," said Comas-Herrera.
The
authors of the JAMA report on Seattle write that: "Although many prefer
not to think about nursing homes, they are a critical safety net for
frail older adults and part of the fabric of our society."
Peru seemed to do everything right. So how did it become a Covid-19 hotspot?
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/05/25/americas/peru-covid-hotspot-why-intl/index.html
The deep inequality in Peru is one
reason, according to Dr. Elmer Huerta, a Peruvian doctor and contributor
to CNN en Español. "What I have learned is that this virus lays bare
the socio-economic conditions of a place," he said.
Many of Peru's poor have no choice but to venture outside their homes for work, food or even banking transactions.
"You're supposed to avoid human contact in a society where one can't stay at home," Huerta said.
People have also ended up crowding at banks as they attempted to access coronavirus relief funds.
The
government's stimulus package to help millions of Peru's most
vulnerable families was a good idea, but its distribution was poorly
designed, said Kristian Lopez Vargas, a Peruvian economist and assistant
professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
New Evidence Suggests COVID-19 Patients On Ventilators Usually Survive
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/05/15/856768020/new-evidence-suggests-covid-19-patients-on-ventilators-usually-survive
COVID-19 has given ventilators an undeservedly bad reputation, says Dr. Colin Cooke, an associate professor of medicine in the division of pulmonary and critical care at the University of Michigan.
"It's
always disheartening to know that some people are out there saying if
you end up on a ventilator it's a death sentence, which is not what we
are experiencing — and I don't think it's what the data are showing,"
Cooke says.
Early reports
from China, the United Kingdom and Seattle found mortality rates as
high as 90% among patients on ventilators. And more recently, a study of some New York hospitals seemed to show a mortality rate of 88%.
But
Cooke and others say the New York figure was misleading because the
analysis included only patients who had either died or been discharged.
"So folks who were actually in the midst of fighting their illness were
not being included in the statistic of patients who were still alive,"
he says.
About a quarter of Covid-19 patients put on ventilators in New York's largest health system died, study finds
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/04/22/health/coronavirus-ventilator-patients-die/index.html
About
a quarter of coronavirus patients who needed ventilators to help them
breathe died within the first few weeks of treatment, a study of New
York's largest health system showed.
It found that, overall, about 20% of Covid-19 patients treated at Northwell Health died, and 25% of those placed on ventilators
died. A ventilator is a device that forces air into the lungs of
patients who cannot breathe on their own because of severe pneumonia or
acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Other, smaller reports have indicated that patients who need ventilation are unlikely to survive.
Will Malka Leifer stand trial? Court to decide today
https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/court-to-decide-whether-malka-leifer-fit-for-trial-629321
Should Jerusalem District Court rule Leifer is fit for trial after six years of legal battles, defense lawyers are likely to appeal to Supreme Court.
As stark 100,000 deaths landmark looms, Trump pursues his political obsessions
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/05/26/politics/trump-covid-death-toll/index.html
Sometime in the next few days, the 100,000th American will succumb to Covid-19 in a pandemic that President Donald Trump once predicted would just "miraculously" disappear.
Yet
despite, and perhaps because of, his earlier cavalier attitude, Trump
spent the long holiday weekend bemoaning everything but the tragic roll
call of death -- while also finding time to claim he got "great reviews" for handling the crisis.
And he indulged his preoccupations on
his tax returns, Hillary Clinton, Fox News, slanders against MSNBC host
Joe Scarborough, the Russia investigation, Joe Biden's mental health, former Attorney General Jeff Sessions,
mail-in voting in November and highlighted dangerous and unproven
Covid-19 therapies promoted on conservative media he has tested himself.
After three years of Trump deliberately
trampling the normal codes of presidential behavior -- partly to show
supporters he remains an anti-elite outsider, none of this is
surprising.
But that doesn't mean
it isn't jarring, as the most wrenching moment so far approaches in the
nation's battle against a pandemic that while ebbing in terms of total
deaths is trending up in 18 states, is steady in 22 and easing in 10
more. More than 98,000 people in the US
have now died from the coronavirus and more than 1.6 million have been
infected. More than 30 million Americans have lost their jobs and the
unemployment rate is approaching Great Depression levels.
There was little evidence of a deeper
meaning to his presidency at this stage than personal and political
grievances. Also missing is a more sweeping policy framework for a
potential second Trump term. And other than a relentless push to support
an aggressive opening of the country, for instance in a new demand for
schools to open, Trump seems far less interested in how the task can be
accomplished safely -- other than retweeting CDC hand washing advice --
than his boiling political feuds.
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